According to software giant Oracle, Java is deployed across more than 3 billion systems worldwide. But the truth is that many people who have this powerful program installed simply do not need it, or only need it for very specific uses. I’ve repeatedly encouraged readers to uninstall this program, not only because of the constant updating it requires, but also because there seem to be a never-ending supply of new exploits available for recently-patched or undocumented vulnerabilities in the program. (http://krebsonsecurity.com/tag/java/)

The developer of our's School's system management system however tells me that we have nothing to fear as JavaScript is separate from the java VM. Does this mean that in order to be secure, rather than disabling JavaScript in our browsers we can simply make sure that we uninstall all JAVA packages on our machines?

The developer of our's School's system management system however tells me that we have nothing to fear as JavaScript is separate from the java VM. Does this mean that in order to be secure, rather than disabling JavaScript in our browsers we can simply make sure that we uninstall all JAVA packages on our machines?

Disabling JavaScript will do nothing to protect you from Java issues, because Java and JavaScript have nothing to do with each other.

Hi, thanks for that. On uninstalling Java (as per the first quote's recommendation), isjavaexploitable.com reported that my computer was safe. This seems simpler than having to check the plugins on my browsers

Hi, thanks for that. On uninstalling Java (as per the first quote's recommendation), isjavaexploitable.com reported that my computer was safe. This seems simpler than having to check the plugins on my browsers

Yes, uninstalling is a more broad-brush approach that also works. Some people like myself have java programs that need to run outside of the web browser(where the existing unpatched danger is), such as Minecraft, so uninstalling is not a solution for such circumstances.

Yes, uninstalling is a more broad-brush approach that also works. Some people like myself have java programs that need to run outside of the web browser(where the existing unpatched danger is), such as Minecraft, so uninstalling is not a solution for such circumstances.

Yeah it is pretty heavy handed... well the patch is out now so all good until next time..... it does big the question about social responsibility and legal liabilities but that's a discussion for another forum